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Buddleja caryopteridifolia : ウィキペディア英語版 | Buddleja caryopteridifolia
''Buddleja caryopteridifolia'' W.W.Sm. is a small deciduous shrub discovered by George Forrest in 1913 on open ground at 3,000 m on the Tong Shan in the Yangtze valley, China. The species was described and named by William Wright Smith in 1914.〔Smith W.W. (1914). ''Notes Royal Botanic Gardens Edinburgh 8: 179.〕 Resembling ''B. crispa'', it was sunk under this name by Leeuwenberg,〔Leeuwenberg, A. J. M. (1979) ''The Loganiaceae of Africa XVIII Buddleja L. II, Revision of the African & Asiatic species''. H. Veenman & Zonen, Wageningen, Nederland.〕 although it remains recognized as a separate species in horticulture. 〔Stuart, D. (2006). ''Buddlejas''. RHS Plant Collector Guide. Timber Press, Oregon, USA. ISBN 978-0-88192-688-0〕 It is likely that some specimens previously grown under this name at the Royal Botanic Gardens Edinburgh were actually ''Buddleja sterniana''. 〔Cotton, A. D. (1947). Spring flowering buddleias. RHS Journal Vol. 72. 1947. pp 427 – 437. Royal Horticultural Society, London.〕 ==Description== ''B. caryopteridifolia'' grows to 2 m in height in the wild, and bears small upright terminal panicles with relatively few flowers. The colour of the sweetly scented flowers is generally pink-purple, which appear in spring or late summer. The grey-green lanceolate leaves are less tomentose than ''B. crispa'', usually with irregular toothed margins, although the margins of the commonly cultivated form are entire. Most leaves are opposite but occasionally shoots are produced with some alternate leaves. The foliage resembles that of several species of the ''Caryopteris'' genus for which it is named.
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